Online resources

On this page, you will find details about online resources provided by other organisations.

Archives New Zealand

View online copies of the nine Treaty sheets on Archives New Zealand's website. A flickr page on Waitangi 175: a day-by-day account of the signing of te Tiriti o Waitangi, through the records at Archives New Zealand can be viewed here.

The National Library of New Zealand now has the Treaty of Waitangi on display as He Tohu, a new permanent exhibition of three nation-building constitutional documents.

Digital New Zealand

You can find photographs of the Treaty of Waitangi and the Treaty House on DigitalNZ by entering a search for 'Treaty of Waitangi'. View a set of Treaty images compiled by an Alexander Turnbull Librarian.

Heritage New Zealand

Download any of the six free Path to Nationhood tours for iPhones and iPads or Android and experience the heart and soul of early New Zealand’s Northland where Māori and Pākehā first met.

Ministry of Education's New Zealand Curriculum Online

Wharehoka Wano shares his ideas about the importance and meaning of the Treaty of Waitangi curriculum principle. In this video, simple strategies to get started and describing what might be seen in classrooms where the Treaty of Waitangi principle is enacted are offered.

National Library of New Zealand

The Library's Services to Schools webpage provides a list of additional Treaty of Waitangi websites. You can also view many more resources held by the National Library of New Zealand here.

The National Preservation Office Te Tari Tohu Taonga has published a new guide: Caring for Taonga – Marae Photographs Āta Tiakina Ngā Whakaahua I Ngā Marae.If you or your organisation would like a copy please email: preservation@dia.govt.nz.

Network Waitangi

A copy of their Treaty of Waitangi: Questions and Answers document answering over 50 frequently asked questions can be downloaded here.

Ngā Taonga Sound & Vision

Ngā Taonga Sound & Vision is the brand name for the New Zealand Archive of Film, Television and Sound Ngā Taonga Whitiāhua Me Ngā Taonga Kōrero. The Archive was formed by the amalgamation of three of New Zealand’s major audiovisual archives: the New Zealand Film Archive Ngā Kaitiaki O Ngā Taonga Whitiāhua, Sound Archives Ngā Taonga Kōrero, and the Television New Zealand Archive. Search their online catalogues for relevant resources.

NZ On Screen

Search this website for New Zealand television and film video clips which features historic news clips including in 1973 when Prime Minister Norman Kirk announced that the anniversary of the signing of the Treaty of Waitangi would be a unifying national holiday. In 2015 NZ On Screen launched their Waitangi Collection which features a wide selection of local documentary, drama, current affairs and newsreel footage, ranging in date from 1960 to 2009.

Te Papa's Treaty 2 U

Te Papa's Treaty 2 U website was created as part of their touring exhibition. This exhibition has now closed but you can still view material from their work including where you can listen, interact, and most importantly have fun.

Te Kete Ipurangi

Treaty of Waitangi principle in action videos featuring examples from schools of the Treaty of Waitangi principle in action. These stories provide examples of ideas and approaches some schools are using to reshape their curricula.

Waitangi Associates

This website includes a historical context, the Declaration of Independence in English and Māori, a letter from James Busby to the British Under Secretary of State and an extract of a Despatch from Lord Glenelg to Major-General Sir Richard Bourke, New South Wales, dated Downing Street, 25th May 1836.

Waitangi National Trust

The Waitangi National Trust in association with the Ministry of Education has developed an educational programme available to schools visiting the Treaty Grounds.

Waitangi Tribunal

Over the years, the Tribunal has produced a number of resource kits for use in primary and secondary schools. Although most were first published some years ago, they have been reviewed and can still be used effectively within the social studies syllabus.

Treaty of Waitangi Past and Present - the latest resource kit looks at the signing of the Treaty of Waitangi, and places it within the context of New Zealand society at the time. It also examines what the Treaty means today. The kit was written for primary school students, fitting within the social studies curriculum, but will be useful for all Māori language students.

The kit contains booklets in both English and Māori, eight full-colour A4 illustration cards, and a teachers' guide, which lists further resources.